84 RECOnDS OK TllK AUS TRAMAN MTSETM. 



spiues. F'dces. — Powerful, projecting, thickly' clothed witli long hairs, 

 but displaying naked areas; inner angle of tl)e furrow of each falx aimed 

 with fifteen strong teeth, and the outer witli ten ; between these two rows 

 there is a dense cluster of very small teeth ; fang well curved, long, almost 

 black. M((,ri]lii'. — Moderately long, reddish-brown, well arched, clothed 

 with long hairs, apex of inner angle terminating in an obtuse point, inner 

 area densely spined. Lithium. — Concolorons, free, longer than broad, well 

 arched, moderately clothed with long hairs, a})ex densely spined. Sfennitn. 

 — ^Concolorous also, somewhat pyriform, deeply excavated in front, arched, 

 thickly clothed with long hairs; slf/ilhi marginal, anterior and median 

 pairs small, posterior pair leather large. Abdomen. — Obovate, dark-brown, 

 arched, slightly overhanging base of cephalothorax, densely hairy. Spiu- 

 iifrets. — Yellow, short, stout, hairy ; supei'ior pair tapering, first joint 

 longest, second shortest, the third coniform ; inferior pair close together, 

 cylindrical, apices truncated. 



()h.<t. — The species described above is very distinct from that of IT. 

 cprltprt'ii, L. Koch. In tlie female of the species quoted, tlie anterior row 

 of eyes is recurved, instead of being straight, and the front medians are 

 the largest of the series ; in the male this row is straight, but the relative 

 sizes are the same. Tlie abdomen is round, as broad as long and only 

 sparingly hairy, whilst in 77. Jilrsitfn (siiprn) it is obovate and densely 

 clothed with liaii's. These points serve easily to differentiate the two 

 species, but the student is directed to Koch's description and figtiies"'. 



7/'(//. — Papua. 



(Je)iiis Anepsiada, Itidiil. ^- I'idl. 



AxKPsiAhA VK\n;irosA, liaiiili. A' VidL 



Aiii'iisliuhi reiifn'riniii, Rainb. and Pull., Hec. Aust. ^lus., xii., 7, 191S, p. 

 167, pi. x.xiv., Hg. 120. 



()li!<. — This, the type species of the genus, was originally recorded 

 from (Moncurry, Central Queensland. 'IMiough vaiving vei'v slightly in 

 si/e the two Papuan exani])les of the " C'hevert " Kxpedition [tresent no 

 distinct dilferences from the Cloncurry exain[)le. 



//.(/-.— Papua. 



(1 I'll IIS Hexathele, An fa. 



11 i:\ATii i:i,K iiocH';ri:iTKi;i, .\ii^.<. 



He.riillifli' lnirli.-<lflleri, Auss., \'erh. zool.-bot. (ies. Wicii. P"^?!, ]>. 171 : 

 L. Koch, Die Aracli. des Austr., i., lS7o, p. I.")!!, pi. \.\xv., tig. 7 ; 

 Hogg, Proc. Zool. Soc, Lond., li»01. p. t27('>, tig. 11. 



0//.V. — if, as pointed out in my introducluiy rcnnii-ks (p. 77, "ulr) the 

 specimens of the above species were correctly la Itt'llcil. then the occurience 



» L. Koch— Dif .Vrn.li. <les Aust., i., 1873, p. 4r)3, pi. xxxv.. fi^'s. <>, 6.i. fi/,. 6.-. 



